Most star formation in galaxies takes place in embedded clusters, within Giant Molecular
Clouds (GMCs). Stars also generally form as part of binary star systems, with almost
all massive stars having at least one close companion. Binaries shape the physical properties
of older star clusters by setting their central density and ejecting low-mass stars,
but also play a role during cluster formation by modifying the mechanical and radiative
feedback from massive stars and shedding enriched material in the cluster’s gas reservoir.
Conversely, dynamical interactions between stars in dense stellar environments are
known to form, modify, and destroy binary systems. In consequence, the populations
of binaries observed in the Galactic field and in old stellar clusters are understood to
be shaped by a combination of the physics of star formation and subsequent dynamical
interactions in embedded clusters, although the relative importance of these processes
remains unknown. In this thesis, we implement a prescription for an initial population of
binaries in the coupled N-body and radiation hydrodynamics star cluster formation code
Torch, and investigate how this initial population is modified in the earliest stages of
cluster formation, while gas and stars coexist. As an ansatz for the initial population of
binaries, we use the properties of main-sequence binaries in the Galactic field. We first
perform a suite of simulations initialized from a 10^4 M⦿ cloud, in which the simulations
only differ by their stellar content (i.e. presence or absence of an initial population of
binaries, and stochasticity of star formation). We compare the populations of binaries
identified 1.2–2 Myr after the onset of star formation and find that an initial population
of binaries is needed at all masses to reproduce the multiplicity fraction observed in
main-sequence stars. We also show that this initial population is modified in a systematic
manner before the effects of feedback from massive stars shape the gas. We further
find evidence of both preferential formation and preferential destruction of binaries via
dynamical interactions. The net effect of these interactions shifts the distributions of
primary masses and semi-major axes to lower values, and the distributions of mass ratios and eccentricities to larger values. In a second time, we perform simulations with different
virial parameters and initial turbulent velocity patterns, and find that the trends
previously identified are robust to those changes in our initial conditions. We however
find that both the virial parameter and the initial turbulent velocity pattern have a
strong influence on the star formation rate, and therefore on the rapidity with which
the distributions are modified. We conclude that dynamical interactions in embedded
clusters are important for shaping the populations of binaries observed in the MilkyWay,
thus opening the floor to future investigations of the impact of binaries on star cluster
formation. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/26924 |
Date | January 2021 |
Creators | Cournoyer-Cloutier, Claude |
Contributors | Sills, Alison, Harris, William E., Physics and Astronomy |
Source Sets | McMaster University |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Page generated in 0.0016 seconds